“Action
springs not from thought, but from a readiness for
responsibility.” - ― Dietrich Bonhoeffer
(Gospel
text: LK 19:11-28)
While
people were listening to Jesus speak, he proceeded to tell a parable because he
was near Jerusalem and they thought that the Kingdom of God would appear there
immediately. So he said, "A nobleman went off to a distant country to
obtain the kingship for himself and then to return. He called ten of his
servants and gave them ten gold coins and told them, 'Engage in trade with
these until I return.' His fellow citizens, however, despised him and sent a
delegation after him to announce, 'We do not want this man to be our king.' But
when he returned after obtaining the kingship, he had the servants called, to
whom he had given the money, to learn what they had gained by trading. The
first came forward and said, 'Sir, your gold coin has earned ten additional
ones.' He replied, 'Well done, good servant! You have been faithful in this
very small matter; take charge of ten cities.' Then the second came and
reported, 'Your gold coin, sir, has earned five more.' And to this servant too
he said, 'You, take charge of five cities.' Then the other servant came and
said, 'Sir, here is your gold coin; I kept it stored away in a handkerchief,
for I was afraid of you, because you are a demanding man; you take up what you
did not lay down and you harvest what you did not plant.' He said to him, 'With
your own words I shall condemn you, you wicked servant. You knew I was a
demanding man, taking up what I did not lay down and harvesting what I did not
plant; why did you not put my money in a bank? Then on my return I would have
collected it with interest.' And to those standing by he said, 'Take the gold
coin from him and give it to the servant who has ten.' But they said to him,
'Sir, he has ten gold coins.' He replied, 'I tell you, to everyone who has,
more will be given, but from the one who has not, even what he has will be
taken away. Now as for those enemies of mine who did not want me as their king,
bring them here and slay them before me.'" After he had said this, he
proceeded on his journey up to Jerusalem.
Mother
Teresa told a story of the day she met a beggar who gave her everything he had.
The beggar said to her, “Everybody gives you something,” he said, “and I’m
going to also---in fact, everything I have.”
“That
day,” Mother Teresa said, “the beggar had received but one small coin. He gave
it to me and said: ‘Take it, Mother Teresa, for your poor.’”
Mother
Teresa added, “In my heart I felt that the poor man had given me more than the
Nobel Prize because he gave me all he had. In all probability, no one gave him
anything else that night and he went to bed hungry.”
"For
everyone to whom much is given, of him shall much be required….(Luke
12:48)
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